Archives: Newsletter Post
Why Boredom Matters: Education, Leisure, and the Quest for a Meaningful Life by Kevin Hood Gary
Boredom often prompts us to look for something, anything, to distract us. And now, perhaps more than ever, those distractions are always close at hand. Whether it be our phones, laptops, or TVs, there have never been so many convenient, enticing ways to escape. But fleeing from boredom is a fraught affair. Leaning on technological […]
Patrick Smith on the Virtue of Solidarity in Healthcare
Inequality is killing us—some of us more than others. David R. Williams, a professor at Harvard’s Chan School of Public Health and world-renowned researcher on the social determinants of health, studies just how racism and its intersection with class and gender have detrimental health effects. In a recent talk on “How Racism and Inequality Makes […]
Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals
Oliver Burkeman had tried every time-saving life hack in the book. Author of a productivity column at The Guardian, it was his job to find ways to help people make the most of their time. From experimenting with the Pomodoro Technique to scheduling his entire day in 15 minute blocks, Burkeman felt he was on […]
Educating for Moral Leadership Across the Professions
When Joseph Gutierrez started studying at Vanderbilt’s Peabody College of Education, he was focused on understanding organizations. He cared about justice, but was not sure how exactly that would play out in his work. When he was invited to participate as a fellow in the Cal Turner Program for Moral Leadership, that changed. “I was […]
Meghan Sullivan Considers the Moral Function of the University
In August 2017, just a few days after a white supremacist mob marched on the University of Virginia, one of their most eminent and committed professors, Chad Wellmon, wrote a provocative piece for the Chronicle of Higher Education.1 Wellmon found himself personally devastated by the events, while also deeply skeptical that his university could respond in any […]
Increasing Ethical Engagement, Understanding Impact
Is it possible to increase college students’ concern for the common good—and commitment to pursuing it—when they are faced with ethical dilemmas? Harvard’s Howard Gardner and Wendy Fischman attempted to do just that in their “Beyond the Self” pilot project, and are now helping faculty at institutions across the country adapt and implement the intervention […]
From Strength to Strength
We all reach a professional peak, after which our skills start to decline. But for many, this decline begins much sooner than they expect. Doctors and finance professionals peak in their late 30s, writers between 40 and 45, and scientists in their mid-40s. Accustomed to (and perhaps even addicted to) career success, many respond by […]
Small Things Like These
Claire Keegan’s Christmas novella, Small Things Like These, will not only draw your imagination into the lives of characters in an Irish town during Christmas week in the 1980s; it could also be an argument for liberal education. The main character, Bill Furlong, is a coal merchant with a large family and full days of hard work. […]
A Living Learning Community for Flourishing
How can universities encourage students to move beyond cognitive engagement with ideas about flourishing into habits and ways of being? For students in Villanova University’s Honors Program, a Living Learning Community with a focus on “The Examined Life: the Good, the True, the Beautiful,” aims to do just that, combining a series of well-designed classes […]
KNN Moves to Expand the Conversation around Flourishing in Medicine
The Kern National Network for Caring & Character in Medicine (KNN) is a movement focused on integrating four foundational elements—caring, character, practical wisdom, and human flourishing—within the profession of medicine to ignite positive culture change. This past September, the KNN hosted its first annual conference in Milwaukee and launched an online community of practice to […]